It's been two months since we first previewed the Radeon 8500 and in that short
period of time a lot has happened.

Since then, ATI has officially launched their 7x00 series of cards - including
the 7500 we had a look at in August. ATI has also been hard at work sorting
out the issues with their flagship 8500 that we ran into two months ago. The
Radeon 8500 and 7500 have also received increases in clock speed from the original
specs they announced. This could indicate either higher yields on the cores
or an even stronger desire to compete with NVIDIA after the release of their
Titanium line of cards.

But by far the most surprising thing throughout this whole situation has been
NVIDIA's reaction to the 8500. While we concluded our preview by saying that,
assuming history did not repeat itself, the Radeon 8500 had a lot of potential,
NVIDIA obviously saw a dangerous amount of potential in that card. We have never
seen NVIDIA so concerned with a competitor's product launch before. Their paranoia
was definitely well founded as the Radeon 8500 seemed impressive when we first
looked at it; now, with even more memory bandwidth and a higher fill rate, is
the Radeon 8500 NVIDIA's worst nightmare?

ATI Draws the Line

A confusing product line is the easiest way to lose sales regardless of how
great your products are. ATI's introduction of the four-digit Radeon nomenclature
is intended to give everyone, at a single glance, an idea of how powerful cards
are within a particular family. Unfortunately, with differences in memory types
and the presence (or lack thereof) of a full fledged hardware T&L engine,
ATI's new naming system can be a bit frustrating to more educated buyers and
even more so to developers. Let's take a look at the past and present Radeon
cards and see how they compare to one another:

As you can see, the Radeon 7000 is essentially the Radeon VE without its dual
display capabilities. This is actually the most irritating to developers since
the chip does not have hardware T&L support, making it impossible to recommend
that gamers purchase any Radeon or GeForce card to run their games.

The Radeon 7200 is a 64MB version of the Radeon SDR, and the rest of the lineup
should be familiar to you already.